United States v. Kent Aoki Lee, AKA Kent Aoki AKA Keun Do Kent Lee

296 F.3d 792, 2002 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6222, 2002 Daily Journal DAR 7796, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 14002
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJuly 12, 2002
Docket01-10179
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 296 F.3d 792 (United States v. Kent Aoki Lee, AKA Kent Aoki AKA Keun Do Kent Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Kent Aoki Lee, AKA Kent Aoki AKA Keun Do Kent Lee, 296 F.3d 792, 2002 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6222, 2002 Daily Journal DAR 7796, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 14002 (9th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge.

This case involves application of the special skills sentencing adjustment 1 to the use of a computer.

FACTS

The Honolulu Marathon Association has a web site at “www.honolulu-mara-thon.org.” During the relevant time, U.S. residents could use the site to register for the Honolulu Marathon and pay the registration fee online. Although many Japanese enter the race, the site did not permit online registration from Japan, but told Japanese entrants to register through an office in Japan.

The appellant, Kent Aokr Lee, lived in Honolulu, where he owned a video rental store. Lee came up with a scheme to sell marathon services to the marathon’s Japanese market. Lee owned a computer server, which he kept on the premises of an internet service provider with whom he had a dial-up internet account. He registered the domain name “www.honolulu-marathon.com” and created a site almost identical to the official Honolulu Marathon *794 site by copying its files onto his server. While the official site did not permit online registration from Japan, Lee’s site contained an online registration form written in Japanese on which runners could enter personal information and credit card information. While the official registration fee was $65, Lee’s site charged $165. The extra $100 over the registration fee covered a package including transportation to the race site, a meal, and a tour. Of course, none of this was legitimate, since Lee’s web site and registration package were not authorized by the Honolulu Marathon Association. Seventeen people tried to register through Lee’s site.

Lee’s scheme was uncovered and he pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud 2 and one unrelated count of selling Viagra without a prescription. 3 The main issue at sentencing was whether the district court could impose the special skills adjustment 4 based, on Lee’s use of computer skills in creating his phony site.

Lee created his phony site by copying the legitimate site’s files onto his computer server. Web sites consist of multiple web pages, which consist of individual computer files written in “hypertext markup language,” or “HTML.” The HTML files constituting a web site are located through a directory on a computer server. A computer directory is like a card in an old-fashioned library catalog, that tells where to find a book on a shelf. However a site’s HTML files are referenced, they are linked together in the directory to create the whole web site. These links reflect the specific location of individual files within the server’s structure of directories and subdirectories. The graphics on a web page are actually individual computer files to which that page’s' HTML file links, causing them to' appear when the web page is displayed. An individual graphic file may be in the same directory as the HTML file to which it’s linked, or in a subdirectory, or on another computer server altogether, and the link reflects that specific location. To copy a web site onto another computer server, it’s not enough to copy the HTML file and the graphics for each web page. The copier must also recreate the directory structure of the original site or edit the links in the HTML files to reflect the different directory structure.

The creator of the genuine Honolulu Marathon site testified that Lee could have copied most of the site without knowing much about its directory structure, by using off-the-shelf software such as Microsoft’s FrontPage 98, aided by a general circulation book such as Front Page 98 for Dummies. 5 She also testified that a program like FrontPage would have written a line of code into the fake site’s HTML files, indicating that it had been used. There weren’t any such lines of code in the HTML files on Lee’s site, suggesting that he didn’t use this easy approach to copying the site. The creator of the authorized web site also testified that Lee could have pirated the site, much more slowly and laboriously, by using a text editor to copy it page by page (there were 130 individual web pages) and recreating the original site’s directory structure so that each web page would properly display graphics and link to the other pages on the site. The legitimate site had two features, databases containing entrants’ registration informa *795 tion and a list of past race results, that Lee could not copy onto his phony site, so he linked to those features on the genuine site so that they would appear to be part of his fake web site.

Lee’s phony site contained one feature that was not on the genuine site, the online entry form that allowed residents, of Japan to sign up for the marathon and provide a credit card account number to be billed for payment of the entry fee. The information entered on this form was processed using a “script,” which is a program written in “common gateway interface,” or “CGI,” a programming language. The CGI script used by Lee’s phony site didn’t directly charge credit cards. It just stored the credit card data in a file on Lee’s server, so that Lee could manually charge the cards later. (This database file was password protected, which the government’s 'witness testified would require some knowledge of the server’s operating system.) An excerpt of FrontPage 98 for Dummies that was read into the record told readers that to do CGI scripts, they should get help from someone experienced with computer programming. The official site’s creator testified that writing a CGI form-handling script from scratch would have required significant programming expertise, but that modifying an existing script would have been much easier. She also testified that CGI scripts could be downloaded from the internet, and that web sites could be found that advised how to modify scripts to suit particular online forms.

The district court did not make a finding as to whether Lee copied the web site the easy way, such as by using FrontPage 98 and Front Page 98 for Dummies (and perhaps deleting the software’s identifying code using a text editor), or the hard way, using a text editor to copy the web site’s HTML files page by page and figuring out the original site’s directory structure. Nor did the court make a finding as to whether Lee downloaded the CGI script for his online' form from the internet or made it himself from scratch, and if so, whether he had any expert assistance. Nor did the court make a finding as to whether Lee or his internet service provider maintained his server. The district court found that Lee “was skilled at accessing and manipulating computer systems” and imposed the special skills enhancement. The adjustment raised the guideline sentencing range from six to twelve months to ten to sixteen months. This increase deprived the district court of the sentencing option of imposing no imprisonment. 6

Although Lee pleaded guilty, he reserved his right to appeal if the district court imposed the two-level special skill adjustment under U.S.S.G. § 3B1.3 (2000). Serving of the sentence awaits disposition of this appeal.

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296 F.3d 792, 2002 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 6222, 2002 Daily Journal DAR 7796, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 14002, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-kent-aoki-lee-aka-kent-aoki-aka-keun-do-kent-lee-ca9-2002.